“…The complexities of the relationship between economic development and gender relations have been noticed widely, not just through the feminist critiques of the development discourse on a theoretical plane, but also through the substantial empirical evidence suggesting that expansion of economic opportunities, unless accompanied by specific gendersensitive targets, policies and instruments, does not necessarily result in egalitarian gender outcomes. In fact, there has been a growing concern over the relative ineffectiveness of the gender policy instruments, which, though ensuring specific gender-sensitive targets and, in some cases, even ensuring that decision-making processes at different levels are more inclusive, fail to bring about the desired transformation in gender relations, mainly because of the overarching dominance of patriarchy in various spheres of life and livelihoods (Jayal, 2003;Raju, 2006). The multidimensionality of the processes of exclusion and discrimination that has been the defining characteristic of patriarchal control over resources, opportunities, institutions and decision-making processes, calls for critical scrutiny of the process of economic development, particularly in relation to the differential outcomes for individuals, classes, genders, communities and regions.…”